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Financial services PO adoption on rise: study

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CIOL Bureau
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GURGAON, INDIA: Everest Research Institute, research arm of global consultancy firm Everest Group recently announced a new study which says that the adoption of Procurement Outsourcing (PO) services by financial services firms is expected to regain momentum in the medium to long term as companies leverage a strong value proposition to reduce costs, but deals will be different than in the past.

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Over the past 9-12 months, financial services firms have sought a value proposition focused on leveraging existing procurement technology investments and existing PO initiatives.

This translated into a slow-down in net new PO spending, but a noticeable jump in contract expansion and renewal spending, according to the Institute’s study, 'PO in Financial Services: From Wall Street to Martin Place – Unlocking the Value from Savings Goldmine'.

“PO offers a strong value proposition for the financial services sector, which is why adoption was rapid and aggressive until economic challenges dramatically impacted the rate of adoption,” said Katrina Menzigian, vice president, Everest Research Institute.

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She further added that buyer focus is coming back to PO again as pressures mount to realize identified cost savings opportunities and accelerate growth driven by core lines of business. Given that the PO value proposition remains strong for financial institutions, we expect adoption to strengthen in the medium to long term as the sector tries to stabilize.

The banking segment is the largest adopter of PO among all financial sectors. Compared to other industry sectors, the approach among financial services companies is more about “critical vs. non-critical” spend rather than “direct vs. indirect” spend, said the report.

Global sourcing is playing an increasingly more important role in PO, with nearly 70 percent of PO contracts having an offshore component. Financial services buyers signed only 10 percent of all PO contracts but account for nearly 20 percent of the PO market size.

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More than 70 per cent of firms outsourcing PO are leveraging supplier-owned procurement systems with COTS dominating the sourcing and pay-to-procure (P2P) space.

The report added that Accenture is the clear and dominant leading supplier with nearly 95 percent of market share (by ACV) with Xchanging capturing nearly all of remaining share.

“PO can impact a cost base representing 5-10 per cent of revenues of a financial services organization. A US$10 billion organization can generate annual savings of US$50-100 million,” said Menzigian.

“While the current supplier landscape for PO is highly concentrated, we expect several new suppliers to enter the market,” said Saurabh Gupta, research director, Everest Research Institute and co-author of the report.

He further added that suppliers such as Genpact, WNS, and Wipro, who have strong FAO experience in financial services and emerging PO capability will likely be among the new entrants.